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Rabha people

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Rabha
Total population
c. 359,000 (2011)
Regions with significant populations
Population in India and Bhutan
Assam296,189[1]
Meghalaya32,662[2]
West Bengal27,820[3]
Bhutan1,600[4]
Languages
Assamese, Rabha[5]
Religion
Hinduism (40%)
Animism (30%)
Christianity (15.34%)
Islam (0.43%)[citation needed]
Related ethnic groups
Bodo-Kachari

The Rabha people are a Tibeto-Burmese ethnic group who live mostly in the Northeast Indian state of Assam, with a lesser population in the adjacent state of West Bengal.[6] They primarily inhabit the plains of Lower Assam and the Dooars, while some are found in the Garo Hills. Outside of India, they have a presence in Bhutan, with communities in nine districts.[7] Most of the Rabhas of Dooars refer to themselves as Rabha, but some of them often declare themselves as Kocha.[8]

Groups

The Rabha community is divided into several subgroups or clans, each with distinct dialects, traditions, and cultural practices. According to linguistic and ethnographic studies, there are eleven dialectal groups of Rabhas: Rongdani, Maituri, Pati, Dahori, Dotla, Halua, Betolia, Hanna, Sunga, Modahi, and Kocha.[9]

Among these, the Rongdani, Maituri, and Kocha Rabha dialects are still actively spoken, while others have become endangered or have completely died out.[10]

These groups share close linguistic and cultural similarities with other members of the Bodo-Kachari ethnolinguistic family, including the Garo, Kachari, Mech, and Hajong communities.[11]

The Rabhas belong to the Indo-Mongoloid group of people and are among the nine plains tribes and fourteen hill tribes of Assam.[12] [13]

Language

Linguistically, Rabha has been classified in the following way: Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, JingphoKonyak-Bodo, Konyak-Rabha, Rabha-, 2009). Members of each of the nine groups of Rabha are thought to speak their own dialect. However, except Rongdani, Maituri and Kocha the rest of the Rabha groups have abandoned their mother tongue for Assamese. In their day-to-day conversation they speak a variety of Assamese mixed with some Rabha words and expressions, and it has been called by a few researchers “Rabhamese." (Tibeto-Burman speeches and their studies, n.d., 22). The language of the Kocha-Rabhas is much more similar to that of the Koch rather than Rabha. A sociolinguistic survey conducted among the Koch (Kondakov 2010) establishes the evidence for this. According to U.V. Jose, the dialectic variations between Rongdani and Maituri are minimal. They are mutually intelligible, and the one merges almost imperceptibly into the other around the Goalpara Baida-Rongsai region. The Rongdani-Maituri dialectical differences become gradually more marked as one moves further west (Jose 2000). Rabha in many cases shows points of resemblance with Atong which is a variety traditionally considered a dialect of Garo.[14][15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Table ST-14 A: Scheduled tribe population by religious community". 2011 Census of India. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  2. ^ "Table ST-14 A: Scheduled tribe population by religious community". 2011 Census of India. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  3. ^ "Table ST-14 A: Scheduled tribe population by religious community". 2011 Census of India. Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.
  4. ^ Project, Joshua. "Rabha in Bhutan". Joshua Project. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
  5. ^ Project, Joshua. "Rabha in India". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
  6. ^ "Rabha, Bodo and Garo, all of which belong to a close-knit group of Tibeto-Burman languages."(Joseph 2006:1)
  7. ^ Project, Joshua. "Rabha in Bhutan". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
  8. ^ "There stills exist another group of Rabhas called the Kocha or Koch"(Joseph 2006:2)
  9. ^ Joseph, U. V. (2006b). Rabha Grammar. Mysore: CIIL. p. 2.
  10. ^ Project, Joshua. "Rabha in Bhutan". Joshua Project. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
  11. ^ Kondakov, A. (2010). Sociolinguistic Survey among the Koch. Anthropos Institute. p. 22.
  12. ^ The Tribes of Assam. Government of Assam. 2018.
  13. ^ "Rabha Baptist Convention". Rabha Baptist Convention. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
  14. ^ Kondakov, Alexander (2023). "A Sociolinguistic Survey of the Rabha Dialects of Meghalaya and Assam". Journal of Language Survey Reports (2013): 7 – via SIL International.
  15. ^ "A Sociolinguistic Survey of the Rabha Dialects of Meghalaya and Assam". SIL International. 2022-09-15. Archived from the original on 2024-07-24. Retrieved 2024-12-31.

References

  • Mitra, A. (1953), West Bengal: District Handbooks: Jalpaiguri, Govt. of West Bengal
  • Basumatārī, Phukana Candra (2010). The Rabha Tribe of North-East India, Bengal and Bangladesh. Mittal Publications.
  • Joseph, Umbavu (2006). Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region, Volume 1 Rabha. Brill.

Further reading

  • Saha, Rebatimohon (1987) "Jalpaiguri Jelar Koch-Rabha Samaj" (in Bengali) published in Ananda Gopal Ghosh edited Madhuparni, Special issue on Jalpaiguri District.
  • Raha, M.K. (1974) "The Rabhas of Western Duars: Structural Analysis of a Changing Matrilineal Society", Bulletin of the Cultural Research Institute, Vol. 10 (1 & 2).
  • Ghosh, Saumitra (1990) "Vanbasi Rabhara" (in Bengali) Desh, Vol 57 (12), January 20.
  • Lokobok, Romeo Rwtin (2022). Constructing cultural identity of the kocha rabhas: a study on kokrajhar district of btad, assam (Doctor of Philosophy). Gauhati University.
  • Roy Choudhury, B. (1970) "Social Mobility Movement among the Rabhas of North Bengal", Man in India, Vol 50 (1).
  • Gupta, Pabitra Kumar (1977) "Uttarbanger Rahba Samaj O Dharmasanskar Aandolon", (in Bengali) in Madhuparni: Special North Bengal Issue, 1977.
  • Sarma, Dr. Nabin Ch (2006) "Oral Songs of Tribal Communities of Assam" a project of Assam Sahitya Sabha, Assam Institute of Research for Tribals and Scheduled Castes